30 Cameroonian Soldiers Sent On Air Force Training To The US Flee Training Camp To Seek Asylum

Reports say about thirty Cameroonian US soldiers who were sent for Air Force training at the LACKLAND AIR FORCE BASE, situated at San Antonio, Texas have deserted the training ground, and are presently seeking asylum in the Trumpland(USA).

According to Cameroonian anti-Biya activist on exile in the US, Patrice Nouma, reporting the story, these group of soldiers, are currently under the Commander of a certain Colonel Martin Claude Owona, Commander of Air Force 101, who was sacked by President Biya through Decree N° 2015/221 of 12 May 2015 from his position of Air Force 101 of the the joint military region number .

Colonel Martin Claude Owona was kicked out from Mr. Biya's army for diverting gifts in kind, offered by Economic Operators and Cameroonians of goodwill to troops fighting against Boko Haram in the Far North to his personal interest.

The said soldiers arrived San Antonio for a six months training, and the exiled Colonel Owona intoxicated them that their mission allowances will not be paid to them by the corrupt Generals in the Biya's military.

The soldiers at once understood that the usual embezzlers of public fundswho always go unpunished by Paul Biya have embezzled their mission money as is their tradition.

The poor soldiers of the Joint Multinational Military Force for the fight against Boko Haram have just recently been dispersed without their allowance of 25 months been paid to them. Those who dared to manifest are languishing in jail, and sources say there is panic in the Cameroonian military, as small small groups are being created, and more and more of these frustrated military men are gradually loosing the morals of security.

With the level of panic and insecurity right in the military as we write, some soldiers are said to have either fled to join high way armed robbers with their weapons, or join internal terrorist groups owned by Biya arresting persons who defy of the regime. Others have fled to the north, with the hope of migrating to Europe. But most end up being recruited by terrorists in Libya, or sold as slaves to Arab countries. Many who venture the dangerous crossing of the Mediterranean Sea, die.